Modernising local government: The impact of new political arrangements on chief officers for leisure and recreation in Wales |
| |
Authors: | Nicola Bolton Scott Fleming |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Cardiff School of Sport, University of Wales Institute Cardiff , Cardiff, UK njbolton@uwic.ac.uk;3. Cardiff School of Sport, University of Wales Institute Cardiff , Cardiff, UK |
| |
Abstract: | Abstract This paper is concerned with the effects of new forms of executive government on local authority chief officers for leisure and recreation in Wales. Based on a new institutionalist approach to research (Lowndes, 2002 Lowndes, V. 2002. “Institutionalism”. In Theories and Methods in Political Science, 2nd edition, Edited by: Marsh, D. and Stoker, G. Basingstoke: Palgrave. [Google Scholar]), survey and interview data were gathered during 2004–05. There are four principal findings: (i) effects of changes to the officer structure; (ii) changing emphasis between the centre and services; (iii) changing roles for chief officers; and (iv) impact and changes as a result of the new arrangements. Political modernisation of local government and the narratives of elite actors are highlighted and theoretical implications are advanced in conceptual models. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|